Most Popular
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Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Seoul city opens emergency care centers
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
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Why S. Korean refiners are reluctant to import US oil despite Trump’s energy push
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Jung's paternity reveal exposes where Korea stands on extramarital babies
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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Prosecutors seek 5-year prison term for Samsung chief in merger retrial
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Naughty and nice list for 2015
So many lumps of coal, so little time. We’ve seen a lot of mischief and bad behavior this year, from mean-spirited campaign pledges to deceptive diesel engines to stubbornly profligate water use. (And that’s not even counting the truly evil deeds of 2015, starting with the Charlie Hebdo killings and running through the massacre in San Bernardino.) But like Santa’s tally, our Naughty ledger has a Nice counterpart, and this year the names included those of an unflappable police chief and, yes, a c
Dec. 29, 2015
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‘-ism’, identity the world’s real words of 2015
What’s the word? The “Word of the Year” at Oxford Dictionaries is not even a word. It is an emoji, a digital image that is used in text messages to express an idea or emotion in a style that seems in my eyes to be aimed at illiterates. Oxford Dictionaries justified this selection by citing an explosion in “emoji culture” over the last year and not, as I fear, a collapse in the public’s desire to read. “It’s flexible, immediate and infuses tone beautifully,” Casper Grathwohl, president of Oxford
Dec. 29, 2015
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2015: The most hyperbolic year ever
It’s the end of the year, when newspaper columnists are supposed to fill in the blank — “2015 was the year of ____ ” — and decide whether the phenomenon in question falls into the category of “good thing” or “good riddance.” This year, however, so much of what happened has been framed as larger-than-life, as history in the making that I find myself at a loss when it comes to identifying the One Defining Trend. There was the big stuff, like guns, refugees and government dysfunction. And then ther
Dec. 29, 2015
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[Dick Meyer] The best political dramas of 2015
In holiday seasons past, I have had fun recommending good novels about American politics. Alas, I haven’t read any this year, old or new. The fault is mine; I’ve been too discouraged with real-life politics to relax with fictional versions. But 2015 was a good year in drama for politics and political history. The year’s masterpiece has to be the musical “Hamilton” by Lin-Manuel Miranda, which tells the story of Alexander Hamilton in hip-hop and other modern musical dialects. It is one of the mos
Dec. 28, 2015
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[Park Sang-seek] My 10 most important global issues of the year
It is almost customary for the world’s mass media to publish lists of the top 10 news events toward the end of each year. I have selected the top 10 issues that have significant implications for the global order and the future of humanity. First, international and national terrorist organizations have rapidly increased and become more violent and barbaric. According to Wikipedia, there were 176 terrorist organizations in 2014. An absolute majority of them were fundamentalist Islamic organization
Dec. 28, 2015
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Cronyism causes worst kind of inequality
Economic inequality has skyrocketed in the U.S. during the past few decades. That has prompted many calls for government policies to reverse that trend. Defenders of the status quo argue that rising inequality is a necessary byproduct of economic growth -- if we don’t allow people the chance to become extremely rich, the thinking goes, they will stop working, investing, saving and starting businesses. A receding tide will then cause all boats to sink. Critics of the status quo have responded wi
Dec. 28, 2015
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Terrorists with assault weapons rewrite script
Over the last 15 years, Americans have become accustomed to distinguishing domestic mass shootings from Islamic terrorism -- the difference between Columbine and the Sept. 11 attacks, if you will. In 2015, that conceptual division broke down with the massacre in San Bernardino, California. It wasn’t the first domestic act of terrorism inspired by Islam -- Army Major Nidal Hasan’s attack on Fort Hood and the Boston Marathon bombing both featured American Muslim terrorists. But San Bernardino was
Dec. 28, 2015
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Fight poverty from radical political center
The main casualty of Washington’s endless partisan squabbling is a pragmatic approach to policy -- meaning one that prefers results to noise. Ideological warriors of left and right say centrism of this kind is mere cover for cynical deal-making, splitting the difference and substituting platitudes for principles. They’re wrong, and proof is at hand. A working group convened by the (conservative) American Enterprise Institute and the (liberal) Brookings Institution has just produced an excellent
Dec. 28, 2015
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[Joseph R. Mason] Ending U.S. oil export ban good but not enough
Congress passed legislation lifting the 1970s-era ban on crude oil exports. While it is great that Congress ended this outdated policy, there is more work to do to realize America’s full energy potential. Under current policies, the government continues to keep federal lands off limits to energy production. Earlier this year, the administration proposed a wilderness plan for Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to starve the Alaska pipeline, while others want to deny Americans their energy resources
Dec. 27, 2015
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[Rachel Marsden] Christmas in Moscow with Putin
Walking around downtown Moscow at Christmastime in the wake of a press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin, I was struck by a distinct feeling of deja vu from my Canadian childhood. Not since then had I heard so much English-language Christmas music infusing the cold, crisp air, or seen so many decorations everywhere that include crosses and religious symbols as well as secular reminders of the season. There is no “war on Christmas” here. Russia is moving in the opposite direction f
Dec. 27, 2015
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Berlin right to flout Russia sanctions
Germany has rallied Europe in support of Ukraine-related sanctions against Russia, but has been less diligent in their implementation. German leaders back these ineffectual measures primarily to humor the U.S. and are rightly unwilling to suffer too much for them. In a recent speech to her CDU party, which ended with a nine-minute standing ovation, Chancellor Angela Merkel said of the sanctions: It was the right reaction, no matter how much we’d like to keep a good relationship with Russia. We m
Dec. 27, 2015
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[Howard Davies] Political consequences of financial crises
I may not be the only finance professor who, when setting essay topics for his or her students, has resorted to a question along the following lines: “In your view, was the global financial crisis caused primarily by too much government intervention in financial markets, or by too little?” When confronted with this either/or question, my most recent class split three ways. Roughly a third, mesmerized by the meretricious appeal of the Efficient Market Hypothesis, argued that governments were the
Dec. 27, 2015
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[John H. Cha] Formula for Korea-Japan harmony
Lincoln Park overlooking the Golden Gate to the San Francisco Bay is a special place for me. My father, bless his soul, used to spend a lot of time there, poring over his oil painting canvass, trying to capture the beautiful surroundings. The park also houses an art museum, Legion of Honor, known for its European painting collection. An Auguste Rodin bronze statue, The Thinker, guards its entrance, where my children used to run around during the 1970s and 1980s. Come November 1984, Holocaust Mem
Dec. 27, 2015
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[Yu Kun-ha] Challenges for finance minister
The Korean economy is expected to face a host of external and internal challenges in 2016. Externally, the risks stemming from the world’s two largest economies, the United States and China, will put the Korean economy to a severe test. Domestically, a rapid rise in household and government debt and resistance to structural reforms will constrain efforts to boost the economy. Yu Kun-ha Earlier this week, President Park Geun-hye picked a new helmsman who will steer the nation through these challe
Dec. 24, 2015
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[Jawed Naqvi] Did Gandhi hate music, cinema?
Wonder what Nietzsche — who famously claimed not to believe in a god that could not dance — would have said of Gandhi. The question arose when I went to an old-world type meeting where people were celebrating the centenary year of the late Khwaja Ahmed Abbas, a leftist writer and filmmaker. Iffat Fatima and Syeda Saiyidain have produced an impressive reference guide to his enormous body of work, primarily as a writer of countless books, newspaper articles and numerous film scripts. It is safe t
Dec. 24, 2015
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Strengthened IMF benefits U.S. and world
Overlooked in the circus of national politics this past week was a small victory for U.S. global leadership and common sense -- in the bipartisan agreement to restore full U.S. support for the International Monetary Fund. This move, part of what’s known as “quota reform” of the IMF, should have been a no-brainer when it was proposed five years ago. The modernization plan will expand the voting power of emerging economies such as China and India in the IMF, and modestly reduce that of European co
Dec. 24, 2015
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We must do more to help H.K. street sleepers
On Dec. 13, a 59-year-old street sleeper who had worked as a food delivery worker was found dead at the intersection of Fa Yuen Street and Nullah Road in Kowloon’s Mong Kok district. Two months earlier, a homeless woman was found dead in a 24-hour McDonald’s at a public housing estate in Kowloon Bay in Kowloon. It is believed, from security camera footage that she was a street sleeper who regularly spent her nights in McDonald’s. These are terribly sad stories at a time when people are preparin
Dec. 24, 2015
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India returns to Russia for weapons procurement
A tactical imperative and a strategic rekindling of relations could both result from the Defense Acquisition Council’s clearing the purchase of five advanced S-400 Triumph antiballistic missile systems from Russia. The price, an estimated 350 billion rupees, or about $5.28 billion (to be paid in hard currency), would certainly be duly appreciated by the Russians, who have their economic difficulties given the shrinking of dealings with the West. A major gap in the Indian defense shield would be
Dec. 24, 2015
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Thai government crowing over precious little
The Thai government will today formally list its accomplishments after a year in office. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and his Cabinet will be on hand for the unveiling of an exhibition outside the Government House that continues through Saturday. Keeping the public informed is fine, and politicians can’t be faulted for wanting to boast about gains they’ve made on the country’s behalf. But this is, after all, a military-installed government, and Prayuth goes on TV every Friday to declare wha
Dec. 24, 2015
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[Kim Myong-sik] Putting sanctity of freedom of the press at risk
The Tatsuya Kato episode has fizzled out. The prosecution decided not to appeal the Seoul district court’s not-guilty ruling for the former Seoul bureau chief of the Japanese daily Sankei Shimbun, who was charged with defaming President Park Geun-hye. Had our prosecutors been a little more prudent and independent in their thinking, all the noise over press freedom and responsibility that reverberated across the Korea Strait over the past 14 months could have been saved. In Tokyo, the Sankei is
Dec. 23, 2015